The Many Faces Of Islam
Previous Stories: Islam in Europe
In Glasgow, a Turkish Kurd refugee is seeking compensation from the Home Office, claiming a decision to force him to stay in the
city - where he and his family have been the victims of racist attacks - breaches his human rights. In Paris, a young Algerian woman
is suing her employer for unlawful dismissal after she was fired for refusing to adjust her headscarf. Europe is home to some 12.5
million Muslims who suffer high unemployment - and, since Sept. 11 - growing mistrust from non-Muslims. One sign of the tension came
when the French government tried to create a representative council for French Islam. French Muslim organizations were set to choose
their representatives last June, but Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy canceled the elections. The reason: the vote would have given
the majority to the Union of French Islamic Organizations (UOIF), a federation representing the majority of France’s 1,500 mosques.
The UOIF is allied with the Muslim Brotherhood - the most powerful opposition force in Egyptian politics - which supports the right
of Muslim women to wear headscarves in public schools, something France won’t allow. Europe has a long way to go before Islam is
just another faith. But a young generation of Muslims is speaking out - against racism, Islamophobia and Islam’s own rigidities.
Here are four of this generation’s most compelling voices.
THE ACTIVIST
Dyab Abou Jahjah,
31, Belgium
The Belgian government picked a fight with the wrong man. Lebanese-born political activist Dyab Abou Jahjah is charismatic,
good-looking, articulate and brash - and he may have a point. Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt accused Abou Jahjah and his Arab
European League of inciting the street riots in Antwerp that followed the murder last month of 27-year-old Moroccan schoolteacher
Mohammed Achrak by a 66-year-old mentally ill Belgian man. But Abou Jahjah turned Verhofstadt’s allegations into a trial of Belgian
attitudes toward the country’s 400,000 Muslims. Are Muslims second-class citizens? What will the government do to fight rising
racial tension? And why do many second-generation Muslim Belgians still not feel at home?
The situation is especially dire in Antwerp, where unemployment in many immigrant communities hovers around 30%. Under the slogan
“Our People First,” the far-right Vlaams Blok (Flemish Bloc) garnered one-third of the vote in the last municipal elections in
October 2000. Abou Jahjah gives Belgium’s Muslims a radical voice to counter the Blok. He showed up at the scene of Achrak’s murder
barely 30 minutes after the crime; what happened next is in dispute. Abou Jahjah claims he tried to calm angry Muslims, who rioted
for two nights. The police arrested him, saying he was responsible for the fighting, but an Antwerp court ruled last week that there
was insufficient evidence to hold him.
Two days after his release, Abou Jahjah relaxes in the downtown Antwerp apartment of his lieutenant, 26-year-old Ahmed Azzuz. In
jeans, navy blue sweater and socks, he looks like a graduate student taking a study break. He says he dreams of a pan-European
coalition of Arab Muslims with the power to force European governments to reckon with Islamic communities. “We have three basic
demands,” he says. “Bilingual education for Arab-speaking kids, hiring quotas that protect Muslims, and the right to keep our
cultural customs. For example, there should be laws that prevent discrimination against women who wear the veil.”
Abou Jahjah founded the Arab European League two years ago; it now claims close to 1,000 members across Europe. He is not
anti-American; in fact, he admires anti-discrimination laws in the U.S. “America’s race laws are more advanced than here,” he says.
“I have relatives in Detroit and they are Arab-Americans but they feel American. I don’t feel European. Europe needs to make its
concept of citizenship inclusive to all cultures and religions. I’m a practicing Muslim but I’m not a freak. I’m not a
fundamentalist.”
According to immigration records, Abou Jahjah arrived in Belgium from Lebanon in 1991 as an asylum seeker. On his application form,
he claimed that he had belonged to Hizballah and was fleeing after a dispute with militia leaders. “That was a lie,” he says now. “I
was a 19-year-old boy and I had to make up a story so I could get asylum. I emigrated because I wanted a better life.” During the
1990s, he studied international politics at university in Louvain-la-Neuve and settled in Antwerp, doing odd jobs for immigrant
organizations and trade unions. He’s currently unemployed, but says he’s working on a doctoral thesis.
Among some parts of Belgian society, he’s one of the country’s most hated men. “He should be thrown in jail for good,” says Philippe
Schaffer, a mechanic who runs a garage around the corner from where Achrak was killed. Civil-rights activist or self-interested
agitator? Abou Jahjah may be a little bit of both. But Belgians shouldn’t expect him to quiet down anytime soon - he’s running for
Parliament in June. - By JOHN MILLER/Antwerp